Check out the companies making the biggest moves in the pre-market: ASML — The U.S.-listed stock of the semiconductor manufacturing equipment giant reported record orders and announced strong outlook for 2026 due to the artificial intelligence boom. The company also announced a share buyback program worth €12 billion. Texas Instruments — The company soared more than 8% after reporting better-than-expected first-quarter guidance. Texas Instruments now expects earnings per share to be between $1.22 and $1.48 and revenue between $4.32 billion and $4.68 billion. Analysts had expected revenue of $4.42 billion and earnings of $1.26 per share for the quarter, according to LSEG. Texas Instruments missed Wall Street’s fourth-quarter estimates for both profit and revenue. Seagate Technology — Despite strong fiscal second-quarter results, the storage infrastructure stock has since fallen nearly 2%. Seagate’s earnings were $3.11 per share on an adjusted basis of $2.83 billion. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had expected the company to report earnings of $2.81 per share and revenue of $2.73 billion. Seagate had soared 30% in the past month before its latest earnings report. Qorvo — The chip maker plunged 10% after giving a disappointing profit outlook in its fourth quarter results. Qorvo expects non-GAAP earnings per share to be around $1.20, compared with analyst estimates compiled by FactSet of $1.37 per share. F5 — The cloud computing and security company soared 13% after fiscal first-quarter earnings and sales beat expectations. F5 had adjusted earnings per share of $822 million and revenue of $822 million, compared with analysts’ estimates compiled by LSEG of $3.65 per share and revenue of $758 million. Earnings guidance for the fiscal second quarter far exceeded expectations. Western Digital — The data storage company’s stock continued to soar in pre-market trading in 2026, rising more than 8% as Seagate’s strong earnings led investors to jump on the memory name. Western Digital is scheduled to report earnings after the bell on Thursday. AT&T — The telecommunications giant rose 3% after reporting fourth-quarter results and approving an additional $10 billion in common stock repurchases. Stride — The virtual education company soared more than 26% after posting strong earnings. Stride reported adjusted earnings per share of $2.50 and revenue of $631.3 million. Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings of $2.01 per share and revenue of $627.9 million. Nextpower — The solar technology platform soared 12% after its fiscal third-quarter financial results beat Wall Street expectations and raised its full-year outlook. NextPower now expects full-year adjusted earnings to be between $4.26 and $4.36 per share, up from its previous forecast of $4.04 to $4.25 per share. The company also raised its full-year sales forecast from $3.275 billion to $3.475 billion to a range of $3.425 billion to $3.5 billion. StandardAero — The airplane repair company fell more than 4% after announcing it would issue 50 million shares of stock at $31. This is 6.4% below Tuesday’s closing level. —CNBC’s Michelle Fox and Davis Giangiulio contributed reporting.
